Ronald E. Mabra, Sr., and All-Pro Foodservice, Inc. filed suit against various defendants asserting claims for tortious interference with existing and prospective business and contractual relations, and conspiracy to tortiously interfere with those relations. Mabra and All-Pro appeal from the trial court’s order dismissing their complaint pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-12 (b) (6) for failure to state a claim. For the following reasons, we affirm.
Under OCGA§ 9-11-12 (b) (6),
[a] motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted should not be sustained unless (1) the allegations of the complaint disclose with certainty that the claimant would not be entitled to relief under any state of provable facts asserted in support thereof; and (2) the movant establishes that the claimant could not possibly introduce evidence within the framework of the complaint sufficient to warrant a grant of the relief sought. In deciding a motion to dismiss, all pleadings are to be construed most favorably to the party who filed them, and all doubts regarding such pleadings must be resolved in the filing party’s favor.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Stendahl v. Cobb County,
The three-count complaint (a renewal of a previously filed action) alleged in Counts 1 and 2 that defendant Host International, Inc. tortiously interfered with existing and prospective business and contractual relations arising from a contract that Mabra and All-Pro had with Avendrá, LLC, under which Mabra and All-Pro distributed fresh produce to various businesses including to Host for Atlanta airport concessionaires. Although the complaint alleged that Host was not a party to Mabra and All-Pro’s distribution
Asserting that the complaint alleged privileged business activity which provided no basis for the tortious interference and conspiracy claims, Host and the Collins defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. In response to the motions to dismiss, Mabra and All-Pro amended the complaint. The amended complaint similarly alleged that “[o]n or about November 4, 2005, [Host] induced Avendrá to terminate its [produce] distribution contract with [Mabra and All-Pro]” when Host stopped ordering produce from Mabra and All-Pro for distribution to airport concessionaires and within a month started placing produce orders with the Collins defendants in violation of the City of Atlanta’s Equal Business Opportunity program. According to the three-count amended complaint, this constituted tortious interference by Host and the Collins defendants with Mabra and All-Pro’s actual and prospective contractual relations with Avendrá (Counts 1 and 2), and a conspiracy between Host and the Collins defendants to steal Mabra and All-Pro’s distribution business with Avendrá and tortiously interfere with their actual and prospective contractual relations with Avendrá (Count 3). In an apparent attempt to counter claims that the alleged tortious interference was predicated on allegations of privileged business activity, the amended complaint added the following allegations:
[N]one of the named defendants were parties to a preexisting network of business relationships that gave rise to Plaintiffs’ distribution contract with Avendrá. Moreover, none of the named defendants were either actual parties to Plaintiffs’ distribution contract with Avendrá or third-party beneficiaries of the same. Finally, none of the named defendants had any economic interest in Plaintiffs’ distribution contract with Avendrá.
In response, Host and the Collins defendants asserted that the factual allegations in the amended complaint still showed that the tortious interference claims were predicated on privileged business activity and again moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
To recover on a claim of tortious interference with contract or business relations, a plaintiff must prove the following elements:
(1) improper action or wrongful conduct by the defendant without privilege; (2) thedefendant acted purposely and with malice with the intent to injure; (3) the defendant induced a breach of contractual obligations or caused a party or third part[y] to discontinue or fail to enter into an anticipated business relationship with the plaintiff; and (4) the defendant’s tortious conduct proximately caused damage to the plaintiff.
Tidikis v. Network for Med. Communications &c.,
The tortious interference claims and the related conspiracy claims in both the complaint and the amended complaint were predicated on factual allegations that, even though Host was not a party to the produce distribution contract between Mabra and All-Pro and Avendrá, Host terminated or induced termination of the contract when it stopped ordering produce to be distributed by Mabra and All-Pro and subsequently ordered produce to be distributed by the Collins defendants. These factual allegations showed that Host had a direct economic interest in or benefitted from the contract at issue, and therefore Host was not a stranger to the contract or the business relationship. The trial court was not required to accept as true the additional allegation in the amended complaint that “none of the named defendants had any economic interest in Plaintiffs’ distribution contract with Avendrá.” Though couched as a factual allegation, this constituted a mere legal conclusion that Host and other defendants had no economic interest in the contract sufficient to qualify them as nonstrangers whose actions were privileged. No facts were alleged to support this conclusion. To the contrary, the factual allegations in the amended complaint compel the opposite legal conclusion that Host was not a stranger to the contract; that its alleged actions were privileged for purposes of the tortious interference claims; and that, as a matter of law, Host could not be liable on those claims. Perry Golf,
A complaint may be dismissed on motion [for failure to state a claim] if clearly without any merit; and this want of merit may consist in an absence of law to support a claim of the sort made, or of facts sufficient to make a good claim, or in the disclosure of some fact which will necessarily defeat the claim.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Poole v. City of Atlanta,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
A motion for judgment on the pleadings, without the introduction of affidavits, depositions or interrogatories in support of the motion, is the equivalent of a motion to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim. McCobb v. Clayton County,
